Divorcing the Fraud CEO,Now He’s Begging for Me Back

Divorcing the Fraud CEO,Now He’s Begging for Me Back

Plot Summary

A wife discovers her seemingly perfect husband, Warren Gilbert, has been fired for attempting to assault a female colleague, not laid off as he claimed. Her world shatters when she finds him brazenly posting online as a "devoted husband" who resigned to stay faithful, forcing her to confront the monstrous reality of their five-year marriage.

Search Tags

  • Role-Oriented: Warren Gilbert, Warren Gilbert and Wife, Female Colleague
  • Plot-Oriented: what happens to Warren Gilbert in business trip scandal, what happens to wife in betrayal discovery

Character Relationships

  • Wife and Warren Gilbert: The protagonist wife believed she was in a stable, five-year marriage with a devoted husband. This perception is violently destroyed when she learns Warren is a manipulative liar who fabricated a story of noble resignation to cover up his predatory behavior and subsequent firing.
  • Wife and Female Colleague: Initially strangers, the colleague risks her own comfort to bring the truth of Warren's assault and dismissal to the wife. This act of courage and solidarity is the catalyst that exposes Warren's fraud and shatters the wife's illusion of her marriage.

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I hadn't slept all night when I stumbled across the post.

Five years into my marriage, I developed feelings for a young woman at my company. I dreamed about her every night. She seemed to enjoy going on business trips with me too. But the night before she was going to confess her feelingsI resigned.

"I couldn't control my physical attraction to her, but I could choose to walk away. To stay faithful to my wife."

The comments section was a shrine to this man. A saint among husbands. A unicorn in human form.

Men called him a "warrior of pure love."

Women were nearly in tears, tagging their own husbands to come witness this paragon of virtue.

I laugheda cold, hollow soundand typed my reply:

"Ever consider that maybe he harassed that 'young woman' and got fired for it?"

Within five minutes, I was buried alive.

"Jealous much? Can't stand seeing a good man?"

"He CHOSE to resign to protect his marriage. Men like this are rare. And you're trying to tear him down?"

"Get therapy. Stop projecting your issues onto everyone else."

"Classic man-hating feminist trying to start a gender war. King, don't even acknowledge her!"

With every worshipful comment, the poster grew bolder.

He even tagged me directly.

"Miss, I understand you might find it hard to believe someone would willingly resign from a VP position."

"But I've been married for five years. Out of responsibility alone, I owe my wife that much."

"If you can't believe it, just pretend you never saw this post."

I stared at that profile pictureso familiar it made my stomach turn.

Warren Gilbert. You really think I don't know what you did?

And you have the audacity to brag about it online.

I shook my head slowly.

Before it happened to me, I never would have believed a man could be this skilled at rewriting his own story.

I set my phone down, too exhausted to keep fighting.

Real life was already enough of a nightmare.

But the moment I'd first seen that post, I knew.

I knew with absolute certainty that the "devoted husband" behind it was Warren Gilbert.

My husband.

The man whose love had curdled into something unrecognizable.

And I was the wife he claimed to be "responsible" for. Five years of marriage, reduced to a punchline in his self-congratulatory fiction.

Two weeks ago.

Warren came home and told me he'd been let go from the company where he'd worked for three years.

"Restructuring," he said. "They had to make cuts."

I didn't think twice. I held him, stroked his back, tried to comfort him.

"Their loss," I murmured. "Someone as capable as you? Companies will be fighting over you."

I believed every word.

Until a young woman showed up at my door.

She was younger than memid-twenties, maybe. Pretty, in an unassuming way. But her eyes were old. Tired.

"You're Warren Gilbert's wife, aren't you?"

I nodded, something cold settling in my chest.

"I couldn't stand by and watch you keep being deceived." She took a breath. "So I came to tell you the truth."

Her voice was steady, but her hands trembled slightly at her sides.

"Your husband didn't resign. He wasn't laid off either. He was fired." She met my gaze. "Because when we were on a business trip together, he tried to force himself on me. I fought back. I reported him. Made enough noise that the company had no choice but to let him go."

She paused, something like pity flickering across her face.

"I'm not here to steal your husband, if that's what you're thinking. Honestly? A man like that?" She shook her head. "Run. As far and as fast as you can."

In that moment, I felt the blood drain from my extremities. My fingers went numb. My feet turned to ice.

In my mind, Warren had always been the Gilbert family's golden boy. The perfect husband. He never went out drinking with sleazy friends. Apart from necessary business trips, he was always home.

And yet he'd done this.

Something so vile it defied everything I thought I knew.

I'd been awake all night because of what came afterthe explosive fight that had torn through our apartment like a hurricane, leaving nothing but wreckage in its wake.

He denied everything, staring at me like I'd lost my mind.

"Jade, what's wrong with you? Early menopause?"

"Why are you so paranoid lately?"

"After everything I've done for you, how can you not see it? I've been out there busting my ass looking for work, and this is what I come home to?"

We screamed at each other until he stormed out, slamming the door hard enough to rattle the walls.

I stayed behind, stewing in my own rage.

Sleep wouldn't come. I tossed and turned for hours, that forum post burning in my mind like a brand.

No. I'm not letting this go.

I sat up, grabbed my phone, and started typing a reply of my own.

"Oh, he 'can't sleep' because he's thinking about some young girl? That's not insomniathat's obsession. The kind that keeps you up at night scratching at your own chest."

"He 'enjoys' going on business trips with her? Please. He's just looking for excuses to get his hands on her when no one's watching."

"And she 'confessed' to him? Don't flatter yourself. You couldn't keep it in your pants, so you harassed her until she couldn't take it anymore."

"The truth is, she reported him. That's why the company fired him. That's why his reputation is in the gutter. End of story."

I hit post and let out a breath I didn't know I'd been holding. For the first time in weeks, something in my chest unclenched.

The comments exploded.

"Wait... this actually makes way more sense."

"Oh my God, is THIS the real story?"

"I knew it! No man is that perfect. Finding a decent guy is harder than finding a three-legged toad, and this one's a fraud!"

Screenshots spread. Shares multiplied. Likes poured in.

Within thirty minutes, the post hit the local trending page.

I was still scrolling through the chaos, almost amused, when the bedroom door flew open.

Warren stormed in, chest heaving.

"Are you out of your fucking mind, Jade?"

"What garbage have you been reading online? You actually posted thatthat filth about me?"

His eyes were bloodshot, veins standing out on his neck.

"I already told you, she's lying! That little slut is making it all up!"

"She thinks every man wants her just because she's young? Is that it?"

He stepped closer, jabbing a finger at me.

"You're my wife. How can you not believe me?"

That was exactly the problem. Five years of marriage had taught me exactly who Warren Gilbert was.

When he got what he wanteda project, a deal, a womanhe'd brag about it endlessly.

When he didn't get what he wanted, he'd stop at nothing to destroy it.

And right now? The more desperately he screamed his innocence, the more he proved his guilt. A man with nothing to hide doesn't fight this hard.

I wasn't interested in another screaming match.

"I'll say it one more time." My voice came out flat. "Either you move out, or we get divorced."

I pulled out the divorce papers I'd already printed and held them out to him.

"All you have to do is sign. We go our separate ways. I stop bothering you, you get your peace and quiet."

A bitter smile tugged at my lips as I met his eyes.

"Otherwise, nights like tonight? They're going to keep happening."

"You're threatening me?"

Warren's gaze narrowed, cold and calculating.

He snatched the papers from my hand.

Then, slowly and deliberately, he tore them to shreds.

"Let me make something clear, Jade." His voice dropped to something low and venomous. "Don't even think about it."

"The day you married me, I told youtill death do us part. Widowhood, not divorce."

"You want to leave me and live some carefree little life on your own?" He laughed, the sound hollow. "Keep dreaming."

On his way out, he grabbed my bank card from the nightstand.

The door slammed shut.

I collapsed onto the bed, tears streaming down my face before I could stop them.

I couldn't even remember anymorewhat had I seen in him five years ago?

Yet five years ago, Warren Gilbert had been so different.

So good.

He'd stood in line for two hours in the dead of winter just to buy me those famous pan-fried buns from Old Town Market.

His nose had turned bright red from the cold, but he never complained. Not once.

When I was sick with a fever, he'd stayed up all night at my bedside.

He'd even cried when I was too delirious to wakeactually shed tears because he couldn't bear to see me suffer.

Then he'd doused himself with cold water in the middle of winter until he caught a fever too.

"I can't stand watching my Jade hurt like this," he'd said. "Let me hurt with you."

But that was five years ago.

Now, Warren Gilbert was rotten to the core.

He was out there cheating, flirting with other women, chasing after young girls.

He'd lost all shame.

The only reason he kept dragging his feet on the divorce was because I earned more than he did.

We'd had screaming matches. We'd threatened to end it a hundred times.

But his cold silence always won. Every fight died without resolution.

I'd spent years wondering: Do people's hearts really change that fast? Or had Warren Gilbert been wearing a mask from the very beginning?

Five years, and I still couldn't tell.

I waited until he'd completely disappeared from view downstairs before pulling out my phone and dialing a number I hadn't called in a long time.

It connected instantly.

"Miss Henson?" The butler's voice was cautious, curious.

I let out a bitter laugh. "Burton Chavez, tell my father I've changed my mind."

"Three months at most. I'll be divorced and home."

Burton couldn't hide his delight. "Wonderful, wonderful! Miss Henson has finally come around. Mr. Henson will be absolutely thrilled to hear this!"

Being the Henson family's eldest daughter was one thing, but I'd built my own life outside of that. I wrote articles, earned my own income.

Yet every few months, Warren would claim he was broke and take my bank card.

This time was no different.

There had been fifty thousand dollars in that account. Warren had blown through every last cent overnight.

I stared at the transaction alerts, watching the balance drop to zero.

Then I called the private investigator.

"Find out what Warren Gilbert has been doing lately."

Evan Parker came back with answers fast.

Warren had taken my money and started a fake company. A front to lure in young women.

"My company just launchedwe're in the growth phase right now."

"Gladys, I can tell you're talented. Hardworking too. How about becoming my secretary?"

Among all his new "hires," Gladys Fox stood out. Stunning face, curves in all the right places, a smile that lit up the room.

She'd become Warren's latest prey.

"I'd love to! Thank you so much for believing in me, Mr. Gilbert. I promise I'll work hard!"

Gladys thought she'd landed a wealthy businessman. She was practically throwing herself at him.

Two weeks later, I called Warren.

To discuss the divorce date.

Gladys answered his phone instead. Her voice dripped with syrupy sweetness.

"Oh, Mrs. Gilbert? Mr. Gilbert had a bit too much to drink. I'm just helping him back to the hotel to rest. Maybe call back when he's sobered up?"

My heart lurched.

Why was a woman answering his phone?

"Who is this?" I demanded. "Are you one of Warren's secretaries?"

"That's right."

Her voice was languid, utterly unbothered.

"Mr. Gilbert saw my potential right away. Picked me out of all the other girls."

"It's truly an honor to serve him."

My voice turned cold. I cut her off.

"Let me give you some advice. Warren Gilbert is bad news. Quit that job and get out while you can."

Gladys just laughed.

"Lady, what kind of wife goes around badmouthing her own husband like this?"

"Besides, Mr. Gilbert is so capablehe even runs his own company. Girls would kill for a man like that."

"If you ask me, you're just one of those jealous shrews who can't stand the thought of him falling for someone younger. You're trying to get rid of me, aren't you? Well, let me make one thing perfectly clear"

"Unless Mr. Gilbert fires me himself, I'm not going anywhere."

Gladys bit down hard on those last few words.

A challenge. A declaration of war.

The line went dead.

Silence swallowed the room. I let out a breath so quiet even I barely heard it.

There's a saying that makes more sense to me now than it ever did before.

You can't save someone who doesn't want to be saved.

After that, Gladys stopped pretending altogether.

She made a sport of answering Warren's phoneno matter where he was, no matter who might hear.

According to her, he was always "passed out drunk at some hotel" or "getting a massage."

She even posted a photo of them on social media. Both of them. Clothes rumpled. Skin flushed.

Visible only to me.

Her lipstick kept "accidentally" appearing in Warren's car.

His shirt collars kept coming home with smears of red that had no business being there.

I pretended not to notice. Maybe that's why she escalated.

Gladys started showing up at my doorstep, clutching folders, claiming she needed Warren's signature on "urgent documents."

She'd stay for dinner.

Her eyes would roam the villa the entire time, drinking it in, envy flickering behind every glance.

"Mr. Gilbert, you're amazing," she gushed one evening. "Only in your early thirties and you already own a mansion like this."

Warren's gaze darted away. "Let's just eat."

I watched them both. Said nothing.

Let him keep his little secret.

Only after Gladys leftreluctant, lingering, savoring her stolen momentdid I let the smile drop.

"Why didn't you tell her the truth?" My voice was ice. "That this villa is rented?"

"She thinks she's landed herself a billionaire. She has no idea the billionaire is a fraud."

Warren's face contorted. "Shut your mouth, Jade!"

He shot a glance out the window, confirming Gladys was truly gone, then leaned in close. His voice dropped to a hiss.

"I'm warning you. Keep your mouth shut about things that don't concern you."

"Otherwise?" He smiled, slow and ugly. "I'll take out a million-dollar loan. In both our names. And you can spend the rest of your life paying it back."

He strolled out, satisfaction rolling off him in waves.

I stood frozen, a stone lodged in my throat.

I'd wanted this marriage so badly once. Dreamed of it. Fought for it.

Now it was a noose around my neck.

He could walk into any bank with our marriage certificate and borrow a million dollars. Spend every cent. And because we were legally married, the debt would be ours. Mine to shoulder whether I'd touched a dime of it or not.

The thought made my stomach turnbile and helplessness and rage all churning together.

After he left, the softness bled out of my eyes.

Divorce. That's the only thing that matters now.

I tried everything. Reasoned with him. Begged. Even cooked an elaborate dinner just to get him in a good enough mood to discuss terms.

Warren refused. Every single time.

Until one night, three months later.

My stomach was in knotsstress, probably, or maybe I'd finally developed an ulcer from swallowing my anger. I went to the hospital for something to settle it.

That's when I saw them.

Warren, cradling Gladys in his arms, rushing through the emergency room doors like the world was ending.

I hung back. Listened.

The doctor's voice carried through the thin curtain. "Ruptured corpus luteum."

Then, a weary sigh. "You two need to be more careful. I understand you're newlyweds, but this kind of... enthusiasm can be dangerous."

Warren rubbed the back of his neck, sheepish as a schoolboy caught behind the bleachers.

"Sorry, Doc. We'll be more careful next time."

Warren cradled Gladys in his arms, his gaze dripping with affection. They looked every bit the lovestruck couple.

"Warren, when are you going to divorce that old hag at home?"

"You've said yourself your marriage is loveless. You've wanted out for ages, and I'm the one you really love. I just want us to be togetherofficially."

Something flickered behind Warren's eyes. Evasion.

"Just... give it a little more time. That woman refuses to agree"

"Who says I don't agree?"

I stepped forward, a flawless smile fixed on my face.

"I've always been willing, Warren."

Both of them went rigid, their expressions curdling as they looked up at me.

Warren's jaw clenched. "Jade! Who told you to come here? What the hell do you want?"

I held out the divorce papers, the picture of innocence.

"Your little girlfriend is practically begging you to sign. Why are you still dragging your feet?"

I tilted my head. "One signature, and you're both free. You could be at the City Hall Registry Office by this afternoon."

Gladys's eyes lit up. She tugged at Warren's arm. "Warren!"

"Don't listen to her, Gladys." Warren didn't budge, but his stare bored into me. "She's putting on a show for you. She doesn't actually want a divorce."

He pulled Gladys away, his face tight with barely concealed panic.

But I caught every backward glance Gladys threw my wayand the hunger in her eyes.

A few days later, I sought her out myself.

"Let's make a deal."

Gladys didn't disappoint. Within two weeks, she'd slipped the divorce agreement into a stack of other documents and gotten Warren to sign without a second glance.

When I finally held those signed papers in my hands, I smiled and offered my congratulations.

Then I slid the wedding ring off my finger and placed it in her palm.

"Miss Fox. You've earned this."

She thought she'd won. Thought she was the phoenix rising to claim her throne.

She slipped the ring onto her finger, admiring it from every angle, chin lifted in triumph.

"Jade, I have to admitI'm surprised. I didn't think you'd actually go through with it."

She gave me a magnanimous look. "But since you've been so gracious about this, I won't make things difficult for you."

She wasn't even married to Warren yet, and she was already playing the role of Mrs. Gilbert.

I finished the last of my coffee and rose, my smile serene.

"Miss Fox, I really should thank you. You threw yourself into the fire just to rescue me."

Gladys froze. Her head snapped up.

"What's that supposed to mean?"

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